Ecophysiology and Biomechanics of <i>Equisetum Giganteum</i> in South America

Equisetum giganteum L., a giant horsetail, is one of the largest living members of an ancient group of non-flowering plants with a history extending back 377 million years. Its hollow upright stems grow to over 5 m in height. Equisetum giganteum occupies a wide range of habitats in southern South Am...

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Main Author: Husby, Chad Eric
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/200
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1250&amp;context=etd
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spelling ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-12502018-01-05T15:29:53Z Ecophysiology and Biomechanics of <i>Equisetum Giganteum</i> in South America Husby, Chad Eric Equisetum giganteum L., a giant horsetail, is one of the largest living members of an ancient group of non-flowering plants with a history extending back 377 million years. Its hollow upright stems grow to over 5 m in height. Equisetum giganteum occupies a wide range of habitats in southern South America. Colonies of this horsetail occupy large areas of the Atacama river valleys, including those with sufficiently high groundwater salinity to significantly reduce floristic diversity. The purpose of this research was to study the ecophysiological and biomechanical properties that allow E. giganteum to successfully colonize a range of habitats, varying in salinity and exposure. Stem ecophysiological behavior was measured via steady state porometry (stomatal conductance), thermocouple psychrometry (water potential), chlorophyll fluorescence, and ion specific electrodes (xylem fluid solutes). Stem biomechanical properties were measured via a 3-point bending apparatus and cross sectional imaging. Equisetum giganteum stems exhibit mechanical characteristics of semi-self-supporting plants, requiring mutual support or support of other vegetation when they grow tall. The mean elastic moduli (4.3 Chile, 4.0 Argentina) of E. giganteum in South America is by far the largest measured in any living horsetail. Stomatal behavior of E. giganteum is consistent with that of typical C3 vascular plants, although absolute values of maximum late morning stomatal conductance are very low in comparison to typical plants from mesic habitats. The internode stomata exhibit strong light response. However, the environmental sensitivity of stomatal conductance appeared less in young developing stems, possibly due to higher cuticular conductance. Exclusion of sodium (Na) and preferential accumulation of potassium (K) at the root level appears to be the key mechanism of salinity tolerance in E. giganteum. Overall stomatal conductance and chlorophyll fluorescence were little affected by salinity, ranging from very low levels up to half strength seawater. This suggests a high degree of salinity stress tolerance. The capacity of E. giganteum to adapt to a wide variety of environments in southern South America has allowed it to thrive despite tremendous environmental changes during their long tenure on Earth. 2009-03-24T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/200 http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1250&amp;context=etd FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations FIU Digital Commons salinity tolerance pteridophyte water potential xylem guttation chlorophyll fluorescence
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic salinity tolerance
pteridophyte
water potential
xylem
guttation
chlorophyll fluorescence
spellingShingle salinity tolerance
pteridophyte
water potential
xylem
guttation
chlorophyll fluorescence
Husby, Chad Eric
Ecophysiology and Biomechanics of <i>Equisetum Giganteum</i> in South America
description Equisetum giganteum L., a giant horsetail, is one of the largest living members of an ancient group of non-flowering plants with a history extending back 377 million years. Its hollow upright stems grow to over 5 m in height. Equisetum giganteum occupies a wide range of habitats in southern South America. Colonies of this horsetail occupy large areas of the Atacama river valleys, including those with sufficiently high groundwater salinity to significantly reduce floristic diversity. The purpose of this research was to study the ecophysiological and biomechanical properties that allow E. giganteum to successfully colonize a range of habitats, varying in salinity and exposure. Stem ecophysiological behavior was measured via steady state porometry (stomatal conductance), thermocouple psychrometry (water potential), chlorophyll fluorescence, and ion specific electrodes (xylem fluid solutes). Stem biomechanical properties were measured via a 3-point bending apparatus and cross sectional imaging. Equisetum giganteum stems exhibit mechanical characteristics of semi-self-supporting plants, requiring mutual support or support of other vegetation when they grow tall. The mean elastic moduli (4.3 Chile, 4.0 Argentina) of E. giganteum in South America is by far the largest measured in any living horsetail. Stomatal behavior of E. giganteum is consistent with that of typical C3 vascular plants, although absolute values of maximum late morning stomatal conductance are very low in comparison to typical plants from mesic habitats. The internode stomata exhibit strong light response. However, the environmental sensitivity of stomatal conductance appeared less in young developing stems, possibly due to higher cuticular conductance. Exclusion of sodium (Na) and preferential accumulation of potassium (K) at the root level appears to be the key mechanism of salinity tolerance in E. giganteum. Overall stomatal conductance and chlorophyll fluorescence were little affected by salinity, ranging from very low levels up to half strength seawater. This suggests a high degree of salinity stress tolerance. The capacity of E. giganteum to adapt to a wide variety of environments in southern South America has allowed it to thrive despite tremendous environmental changes during their long tenure on Earth.
author Husby, Chad Eric
author_facet Husby, Chad Eric
author_sort Husby, Chad Eric
title Ecophysiology and Biomechanics of <i>Equisetum Giganteum</i> in South America
title_short Ecophysiology and Biomechanics of <i>Equisetum Giganteum</i> in South America
title_full Ecophysiology and Biomechanics of <i>Equisetum Giganteum</i> in South America
title_fullStr Ecophysiology and Biomechanics of <i>Equisetum Giganteum</i> in South America
title_full_unstemmed Ecophysiology and Biomechanics of <i>Equisetum Giganteum</i> in South America
title_sort ecophysiology and biomechanics of <i>equisetum giganteum</i> in south america
publisher FIU Digital Commons
publishDate 2009
url http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/200
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1250&amp;context=etd
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